×

Female In 20s Is Latest County COVID-19 Case

With 15 active cases in Chautauqua County, the newest case involves a woman in her 20s. That information was released Thursday afternoon by the Chautauqua County Health Department.

In addition, 113 cases are under quarantine/isolation orders by the public health director and being monitored with 1,132 people under domestic traveler quarantine for having arrived to Chautauqua County from a state listed on the New York state travel advisory. One person is known hospitalized as of Monday.

In all, there have been 254 recovered cases, nine deaths, 278 total confirmed cases and 29,331 negative test results.

COUNTY WARNS OF SCAM

According to state and federal authorities, there is a new phone scam circulating where the callers are posing as COVID-19 contact tracers. These scammers try to obtain credit card or bank account information from their victims.

Chautauqua County officials are asking residents to stay alert and not offer financial information to anyone claiming to be a contact tracer.

“If you are tested for COVID-19, and your test result comes back positive, a Chautauqua County public health nurse will contact you. If during the investigation of the positive case, you are named a close contact, a state contact tracer will contact you. Contact tracing is an effective public health intervention, and it is crucial to stopping the spread of COVID-19.

“The nurse and the contact tracer will identify themselves, tell you where they work, and how they can be reached if you have questions over the course of your quarantine/isolation period. They will ask you for identifying information (name, address, date of birth), because they don’t want to discuss personal health information with anyone but you. They will not ask you for money or financial information; the service they provide is free to you. They will not ask you for your immigration status; it doesn’t matter for contact tracing.

“There are scammers trying to take advantage of contact tracing. A scammer might call, text, or email and say they are affiliated with the local health department and are contacting you to tell you that you have been in contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19. Where the scammer’s conversation differs from the legitimate contact tracing discussion is when financial or payment information is requested. A public health nurse or NYS contact tracer should never ask for payment or financial information.

“Scammers might also try to sell you products to treat or prevent COVID-19 without proof that they work. At this time, there is no FDA approved prevention, home test kit, or treatment. When there is a medical breakthrough, you will hear about it through a reliable source, not from an ad or sales pitch. Washing hands, wearing a face covering in public, maintaining 6 feet of physical distance from people outside your household, and contact tracing are strategies that will slow the spread of coronavirus.”

Christine Schuyler, Chautauqua County public health director, wants everyone to be alert and aware.

“Anytime you receive a call, text, or email asking you for personal or financial information, be concerned about who is calling – don’t provide your social security number; don’t provide financial information, and be cautious of texts or emails asking you to click on a link. Public health nurses and contact tracers will not ask for that information.”

Report the attempt to the Federal Trade Commission at ftc.gov/complaint.

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $2.99/week.

Subscribe Today